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Kwa-Ma-Rolas | Artwork

Facility Details

Main Address

East of N. Lake Shore Drive on axis with W. Addison Avenue
Chicago, IL 60614
United States

Located Within:

Kwa-Ma-Rolas | Artwork

Additional Facility Details
Artist
Haida Indians, original
Artwork Year Installed
c. 1900, original/ 1984, replica
Other Designer
Tony Hunt, replica
Features
Artworks & Monuments, Outdoor, Type: Sculpture
Description

In 1929, James L. Kraft, founder of Kraft Foods Inc., donated the Kwa-Ma-Rolas totem pole to the city of Chicago. A collector of jade and other antiquities, Kraft often traveled to Alaska and the Pacific Northwest to find and buy artifacts. On one such a trip, he found two totem poles believed to have been carved by Haida Indians around 1900. In 1926, after lengthy negotiations with government officials of British Columbia, Kraft purchased the totem poles and transported them to Chicago on flatbed railroad cars. One was installed at a family estate in Wisconsin, while the other remained in a factory yard until Kraft donated it to Lincoln Park. At its dedication in June 1929, local Native Americans danced in costume with students from Alcott School in a pageant symbolizing Kwanusila鈥攖he thunderbird鈥攁nd other carved figures depicted on the forty-foot pole.



More than fifty years later, the Field Museum uncovered new information about the totem pole during preparations for a 1982 exhibition entitled 鈥淢aritime Peoples of the Arctic and Northwest Coast.鈥 Researchers determined that the pole was carved by the Kwakiutl Indians of Vancouver Island rather than the Haida of the Queen Charlotte Islands, as previously believed. This discovery and concerns about the deterioration of the wood in its outdoor setting prompted t